A Pipeline is a manager that moves data objects through a sequence of processing stages. Each stage in the pipeline performs a specific function on one or more of the four basic object types supported by MIRC:

A Pipeline is a manager that moves data objects through a sequence of processing stages. Each stage in the pipeline performs a specific function on one or more of the four basic object types supported by MIRC:

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*FileObject

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:*FileObject

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*DicomObject

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:*DicomObject

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*XmlObject

+

:*XmlObject

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*ZipObject

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:*ZipObject

Each stage is an implementation of a specific interface. All stages expose certain basic methods that provide status information as well as access to the stage's output object. Each Pipeline contains one ImportService as its first component. Each pipeline stage is provided access to a Quarantine object, which may be unique to the stage, into which the Pipeline will place objects that are rejected by a stage, thus aborting further processing.

Each stage is an implementation of a specific interface. All stages expose certain basic methods that provide status information as well as access to the stage's output object. Each Pipeline contains one ImportService as its first component. Each pipeline stage is provided access to a Quarantine object, which may be unique to the stage, into which the Pipeline will place objects that are rejected by a stage, thus aborting further processing.

Revision as of 16:40, 31 July 2007

This article describes a proposed project to develop a stand-alone, configurable processing application for clinical trials data, based on MIRC components and using the MIRC internet transport mechanism. The article is intended for people who have used MIRC for clinical trials data acquisition and management. Please use the Discussion tab to add comments.

Contents

1 Background

MIRC supports clinical trials through two applications, one for data acquisition at an imaging center (FieldCenter) and one for management of the data at a principal investigator's site (MIRC).

The FieldCenter application acquires images via the DICOM protocol, anonymizes them, and transfers them (typically using HTTP, although DICOM is also supported) to a principal investigator's MIRC site. FieldCenter also contains a client for the Update Service of a MIRC site, allowing the FieldCenter application to save date on, and obtain software updates from, the principal investigator's site.

A receiver for HTTP connections from FieldCenter applications transferring data files into the processing pipeline.

DicomImportService

A receiver form DICOM datasets for iinsertion into the processing pipeline.

Preprocessor

A user-defined component for processing data received by the HttpImportService before it is further processed by other components.

Anonymizer

A component for anonymizing DICOM objects or XML objects.

DatabaseExportService

A component providing queue management and submission of data objects to a user-defined interface to an external database management system.

HttpExportService

A component in the DicomImportService pipeline providing queue management and transmission of data objects to one or more external systems using the HTTP protocol.

DicomExportService

A component in the HttpImportService pipeline providing queue management and transmission of data objects to one or more external systems using the DICOM protocol.

The processing pipelines for the HttpImportService and DicomImportService are different. They are not symmetrical. For example, the HttpImportService does not have access to the anonymizer except as part of the DatabaseExportService. Another limitation is that objects received via one protocol can only be exported via the other. While these limitations are consistent with the requirements of most trials, it is clear that a completely symmetrical design would provide better support for more sophisticated trials while still satisfying the requirements of simple ones.

2 Requirements

The following are proposed top-level requirements for the implementation:

Single-click installation.

Processing pipeline supporting configurable number of stages, with the class implementing each stage being configurable.

Support for multiple quarantines.

Pre-defined implementations for key components:

HTTP Import

DICOM Import

DICOM Anonymizer

XML Anonymizer

Storage Service

Database Export

HTTP Export

DICOM Export

Quarantine

Web-based monitoring of the application's status, including:

configuration

logs

status of each pipeline stage:

stage name

queue size, when relevant

data/time of last object received

Support for the FieldCenter Update Service client.

3 Implementation

The core of the proposed implementation is a manager that orchestrates one or more pipelines.

3.1 Pipeline

A Pipeline is a manager that moves data objects through a sequence of processing stages. Each stage in the pipeline performs a specific function on one or more of the four basic object types supported by MIRC:

FileObject

DicomObject

XmlObject

ZipObject

Each stage is an implementation of a specific interface. All stages expose certain basic methods that provide status information as well as access to the stage's output object. Each Pipeline contains one ImportService as its first component. Each pipeline stage is provided access to a Quarantine object, which may be unique to the stage, into which the Pipeline will place objects that are rejected by a stage, thus aborting further processing.

3.1.1 ImportService

An ImportService receives objects via a protocol and enqueues them for processing by subsequent stages.

3.1.2 StorageService

A StorageService stores an object in a file system. It is not queued, and it therefore must complete before subsequent stages can proceed. A StorageService may return the current object or the stored object in response to a request for the output object, depending on its implementation.

3.1.3 Processor

A Processor is a generic class to perform some kind of processing on an object. It is not queued. It exposes methods with calling signatures that are unique to the object type. In the context of the current MIRC implementation, a Preprocessor is a Processor, as is an Anonymizer.

3.1.4 ExportService

An ExportService provides queued transmission to an external system via a defined protocol. Objects in the queue are full copies of the objects submitted; therefore, subsequent processing is not impeded if a queue is paused, and modifications made subsequently do not affect the queue entry, even if they occur before transmission. (Note: This is different from the current MIRC implementation.)